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Bedford-stuyvesant





EARLY HISTORY

The neighborhood name is an extension of the name of the Village of Bedford , expanded to include the area of Stuyvesant Heights . The name ''Stuyvesant'' comes from Peter Stuyvesant , the last governor of the New Netherland colony.

In pre- Revolutionary Kings County, New York , Bedford, which now forms the heart of the community, was the first major settlement east of the then-Village of Brooklyn on the road to Jamaica and eastern Long Island .

With the building of the Brooklyn & Jamaica Railroad , soon taken over by the Long Island Rail Road in 1836 , Bedford was established as a Railroad station near the intersection of current Atlantic and Franklin Avenues. In 1878 , the Brooklyn, Flatbush And Coney Island Railway established its northern terminal with a connection to the LIRR at the same location.

The community of Bedford contained one of the older free African-American communities in the U.S., Weeksville , much of which is still extant and preserved as an Historical site.


ESTABLISHMENT AS AN URBAN NEIGHBORHOOD

In the last decades of the 19th Century , with the advent of electric Trolley s and the Fulton Street Elevated , Bedford Stuyvesant became a Working Class and Middle Class bedroom community for those working in downtown Brooklyn and Manhattan in New York City . At that time, most of the pre-existing Wood en homes were destroyed and replaced with brownstone row houses, which are highly sought after in the neighborhood's contemporary renaissance.


ETHNIC CHANGES

During and after World War II , large numbers of African American s, migrating from the American South upon the decline of agricultural work and seeking economic opportunities in the North, moved into the neighborhood, often preferring it to the available housing in Harlem , then the city's pre-eminent black community. A large number of immigrants from the Caribbean also arrived around this time, coming from countries such as Barbados , Jamaica and Trinidad And Tobago .


POST-WAR PROBLEMS

A series of problems led to a long decline in the neighborhood. Some of the new residents who had been rural workers had difficulty finding reasonably paid work in the urban New York economy. The city itself was in a period of steady decline, exacerbated by abandonment of parts of the transportation network, decline of public facilities and services, inability to deal with increasing crime, difficulties in municipal government and movement of significant parts of its population to Suburb an areas.


THE SIXTIES

The 1960s and 1970s were a difficult time for the City and impacted Bedford-Stuyvesant seriously. One of the first urban Riot s of the era took place there and Social and Racial divisions in the city contributed to the tensions, which reached a climax when attempts at community control in the nearby Ocean Hill-Brownsville school district pitted some black community residents and activists (from both inside and outside the area) against Teacher s, the majority of whom were White and many Jew ish. Charges of Racism were a common part of social tensions at the time. In 1964, a race riot broke out in the Manhattan neighborhood of Harlem after a white NYPD officer, Thomas Gilligan, was accused of Police Brutality and rioting soon spread into Bedford Stuyvesant. This riot resulted in the destruction and looting of many neighborhood businesses, many of which were Jewish -owned. Race riots also followed in 1967 and 1968 , as part of the Political and racial tensions in the United States of the era, aggravated by continued unemployment, dissatisfaction with Civil Rights policies, and the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.


MODERN IMPROVEMENTS AND GENTRIFICATION EFFORTS


Beginning in the late 1980's, the neighborhood began a renaissance which is continues to the present day. In concert with the general improvement of New York City at-large since the decline of the "crack epidemic" at the end of the 1980's, crime in the neighborhood has decreased significantly. Despite the gradual improvement and increased stability of the community, Bedford Stuyvesant continued to be stigmatized by a negative perception of public. A recent campaign was launched in March 2005 to supplant the "Bed-Stuy, Do-or-Die" image in the public consciousness with the more positive "Bed-Stuy, and Proud of It" and highlighted three prominent products of Bedford Stuyvesant; community and environmental activist June Jordan, poet and novelist June Jordan and rapper/actor Mos Def.

The increased attention on the revitalization and renewal of Bedford Stuyvesant has prompted an increasingly diverse range of people to seek affordable housing among the many blocks of handsome brownstone rowhouses. As is expected with gentrification, the influx of new residents has probably contributed to the displacement of poorer residents, but in many other cases, newcomers have rehabilited and brought back to useful occupancy formerly vacant and abandoned properties.

As a result, Bedford Stuyvesant is becoming increasingly more racially and ethnically diverse. The Hispanic population has increased along with the white population. An article in the April 2005 issue of Time Out New York, "The Battle for Bed-Stuy," chronicled the increasing numbers of non-blacks moving in. Many long-time residents and business owners are worried they will be priced out by newcomer " Yuppies ," and that the neighborhood's ethnic character will be lost. Others say Gentrification is spreading because of the appeal of the Brownstone homes that are numerous in Bedford Stuyvesant. However, a substantial black population does remain; Bedford-Stuyvesant's population has experienced less displacement of African-Americans than other areas of Brooklyn, such as Cobble Hill . There are efforts to stop the gentrifying of Bedford Stuyvesant. Still, it is argued by some that gentrification and neighborhood change will improve neighborhood safety and create demand for improved retail services along the major commercial strips including Fulton Street, Nostrand Avenue, Tompkins Avenue and Lewis Avenue.

In July 2005, the New York City Police Department designated the Fulton Street-Nostrand Avenue business district in Bedford Stuyvesant as an Impact Zone , which directed significantly increased levels of police protection and resources to the area centered on the intersection of Fulton Street and Nostrand Avenue for a period of six months. Since the start of the Impact Zone in Bedford Stuvyesant, crime within the district decreased 65% from the previous year. The Impact Zone was renewed for another six month period in December 2005.


BEDFORD STUYVESANT IN THE POPULAR MEDIA

Bedford-Stuyvesant is one of the neighborhoods in New York City (including Harlem of the Harlem Renaissance and Jazz Age, the Lower East Side, Little Italy, Chinatown, the East Village, Greenwich Village, Coney Island and Flatbush) to posesses an identity and culture that is known to audiences outside of New York City.

Bedford-Stuyvesant's prominent neighborhood identity is due in part to the neighborhood's portrayal in a variety of popular media. Director Spike Lee has prominently featured the streets and brownstone blocks of Bedford Stuyvesant in his films, including Do The Right Thing (1989) and Crooklyn (1994). Dave Chappelle 's 2006 film, '' Dave Chappelle's Block Party '' was filmed at the corner of Quincy Street and Downing Street. Chris Rock's UPN television sitcom '' Everybody Hates Chris '' portrays Rock's life growing up as a teenager in Bedford-Stuyvesant in 1983. Billy Joel's 80's hit single "You May Be Right" disparaged the neighborhood with the lyrics "I was stranded in the combat zone / I walked through Bedford-Stuy alone / even rode my motorcycle in the rain".

A large number of well-known rap and hip-hop artists have come out of the Bedford Stuyvesant, most notable among them including The Notorious B.I.G. , Lil Kim , Mos Def , Jay-Z , and Papoose .


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